Questions for the dinner table
What revisions did you make to your structure? Was you structure able to hold more weight? Why? How did revising your structure, "grow your brain?"
Team, feel, and delete all make the long "e" sound. What is the difference between these words?
Today, Mrs. Taylor taught us the difference between a small, medium, and big problem? What do you do when you have a small problem? medium? big?
Which interesting words did you collect during reading?
Which poem are we going to share with Mrs. Anderson and Mr. Bober? Why?
Count to 40. Write the number 26 in words (twenty-six).
Questions for the adults
Has your child turned in his/her pink Magic House permission slip?
Has your child been reading daily at home?
Have you signed up for a conference time? (http://www.signupgenius.com/go/5080a4cacac23a1f49-mrs)
Wednesday, March 7, 2018
Monday, March 5, 2018
Marvelous Monday
Thank you Mrs. Li for teaching us about the Chinese New Year! Your gift of time and knowledge were invaluable!
A pink permission slip for our field trip to the Magic House in May came home today. Please sign and return. There is no cost as PTO is paying for this field trip. (THANK YOU, PTO!)
Questions for the dinner table
How did you conclude your writing today? What strategy did you use? ( Repeat your opinion, Repeat a BIG reason, tell your readers to do something)
How did you add to our Grand Conversation? What was the author trying to teach us in the video?
Why is important to notice the feelings of the character? How can you change your voice to match the feelings of the character when reading?
Spell the word: because
Why did Judy Moody want a new pet in our read aloud, Judy Moody?
What sound does the "ee" make? What is the difference between sped and speed?
Today we completed our graphing assessment. How did it go? How did you feel? How did you show perseverance?
Thursday, March 1, 2018
Thankful Thursday
Reminder: I'm placing book orders tomorrow after school.
Questions for the dinner table:
Questions for the dinner table:
- We are currently studying the characters in our books. Who is Judy Moody? Describe her. What makes her unique?
- How does knowing about the character Zeek in the book Furgus and Zeek, help you better understand Furgus?
- We've been reading a poem called The Library Cheer. What are we going to do to present the poem?
- Eleven students in our class picked blue as their favorite color. Seven students in our class picked yellow as their favorite color. How many fewer people like yellow?
- We are VERY EXCITED about our current unit on opinion writing. What are you choosing to review right now? What strategies are you using to convince your readers (using details, quoting experts, using comparisons, talking back, adding details, using words like, " You got to try...", sharing when, sharing where, sharing what)
- What does the Chinese New Year entail? Why is this holiday important? Who is coming tomorrow to teach us about the special holiday?
- Mrs. McCallister's favorite part of the day is our Grand Conversations. Why do we do Grand Conversations? How do they help us as people? What are the expectations?
- Spell the word squirt. What parts do you know if the word squirt.
- Describe Josephine Baker. Why is she important in US history?
Monday, February 26, 2018
Day in the Life of a First Grader in February
Reminder: I will place book orders this Friday. There are some great books this month!
Day in the Life of Your First Graderπ
Discovery Challenge:
Discovery Challenge:
Build a structure using only three popsicle sticks and some Duck Tape that supports the most weight (in cubes). We discussed qualitative vs. quantitive data, the importance testing out your work and making revisions, and the how to be flexible creator. We will use the data collected for our math lesson on organizing and graphing data. It was pretty awesome to see our kiddos in action!
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Working with a partner on their first creation |
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Made a plan first before executing their first trial |
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Our Winner! We wondered if this structure won because she utilized the most surface area. |
Reading:
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Book boxes out, favorite books in hand, and now we are ready to go on adventures! |
Shared Reading
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We're loving this book of poems |
Tuesday, February 20, 2018
Terrific Tuesday
February 23rd will be the final day for students to turn in their Jump Rope for Heart donations to
Mrs. Patti.
πππππ
Conference Sign up Link:
Field Trip Volunteer Link:
http://www.signupgenius.com/go/5080a4cacac23a1f49-20172018Math Homework packet
Homework packets came home in your child's blue folder today. Please have your child return his/her homework by Friday. Thanks!
Questions for the dinner table:
What is a compound word? How do you spell popcorn? What are the different parts of this word that you know?
Today was the TANGY TUESDAY OLYMPIC CONTEST. Did you enjoy the contest? Share about the puzzles you completed.
We completed our first Grand Conversation. How did it go? Why are we doing Grand Conversations? What are the rules that we developed for Grand Conversations?
Today was the TANGY TUESDAY OLYMPIC CONTEST. Did you enjoy the contest? Share about the puzzles you completed.
We completed our first Grand Conversation. How did it go? Why are we doing Grand Conversations? What are the rules that we developed for Grand Conversations?
Thursday, February 15, 2018
Thankful Thursday
Questions for the dinner table
What story did you retell today? What tools did we use to retell? Why is it important to be able to retell a story?
Spell the word stirring. What interesting words parts do you recognize. (ir, ing, st)
Who is Ella Fitzgerald? Why is she important in our history?
Convince your families of the best place in the world. Give reasons and details for your reasons.
Jada stands on one end of balance and put six bricks on her head. Kendal stands on the other end of a scale and puts four bricks on her head. The scale shows that both girls are balanced. Who is heavier?
Black History Night
What story did you retell today? What tools did we use to retell? Why is it important to be able to retell a story?
Spell the word stirring. What interesting words parts do you recognize. (ir, ing, st)
Who is Ella Fitzgerald? Why is she important in our history?
Convince your families of the best place in the world. Give reasons and details for your reasons.
Jada stands on one end of balance and put six bricks on her head. Kendal stands on the other end of a scale and puts four bricks on her head. The scale shows that both girls are balanced. Who is heavier?
Black History Night
Mr. Meyer, our amazing music teacher, works to help every child find his/her singing voice. First and second grade students sing on the Clayton High School stage next Thursday at 7:00 to open Black History Night.
I will be in a high school classroom just off the front doors at 6:30 to take care of our students while families find seats in the auditorium. I'll sit with the students while we watch the rest of the program. It ends at 8:00, and 1st and 2nd graders exit first so parents can pick up their children back at the classroom.
Our first grade performers should wear black and white clothes.
Please let me know if you are unable to attend.
Tuesday, February 13, 2018
Terrific Tuesday
Reminders:
Valentine's Day Celebration on Wednesday- Please have your child decorate a bag or box to be used for Valentines.
Friday is an early release day- See you at 1:15pm
No School next Monday, February 19th
Can you explain your thinking through this problem:
How do readers go on adventures? (Get ready! Take a sneak peak!; Keep track of WHERE and WHEN, Predict what might happen next)
List words that have the "ar" chunk. List words that have the "ir" chunk.What reasons did you give in your disagreement about Kaelyn's rock choice? How did you respectfully disagree? Did you remember to start your writing with an uppercase letter followed by lowercase letters? Did you capitalize "I"?
What coins would you need to make 13 cents?
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Discussing the details of their chosen rock. How will they write "persuasively" to convince Kaelyn to change her rock choice? |
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Finally! We persuaded her to change her favorite rock! It was hard work. |
Friday, February 9, 2018
Fun Friday
Questions for the dinner table:
An orange is heavier than a lemon. An apple is heavier than an orange. Which fruit is heaviest? Lightest? How do you know?
Why do readers take a sneak peak? (to find our where they'll go and what they'll do) We will continue to focus heavy on comprehension within our next reading unit.
Where did you go in your adventure today? (the current book you are reading)
What kind of writing are we focusing on right now? How did you revise your writing?
Who is Duke Ellington? Why is he important person in the history of the United States?
Spell the word carpenter. What chunks do you notice? Why does the "a" not make it's typical short a sound ("ar" chunk)
Family tip: While reading with your child, allow your child to stop and talk about what is happening, questions they have, and changes they notice in the plot. As parents, we sometimes focus so much on how much our child is reading and her/his accuracy that we forget that reading is not a race, it's an experience. We want our kiddos to be able to synthesize what they are reading, no matter what "reading level" they are entering.
An orange is heavier than a lemon. An apple is heavier than an orange. Which fruit is heaviest? Lightest? How do you know?
Why do readers take a sneak peak? (to find our where they'll go and what they'll do) We will continue to focus heavy on comprehension within our next reading unit.
Where did you go in your adventure today? (the current book you are reading)
What kind of writing are we focusing on right now? How did you revise your writing?
Who is Duke Ellington? Why is he important person in the history of the United States?
Spell the word carpenter. What chunks do you notice? Why does the "a" not make it's typical short a sound ("ar" chunk)
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Coaching each other through our reading |
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We love the games Mrs. Winkler brings |
Reading to the kindergartners/Sharing our audiobooks
Tuesday, February 6, 2018
Terrific Tuesday
Questions for the dinner table
In the book Each Kindness, the narrator changes her thinking about the new girl? How did she change? Why did she change?
This morning we had a guest teacher, Mrs. Klaus. Mrs. Klaus loves our class and was impressed by our first grade readers. Were you able to do the right thing, even when no one (Mrs. McCallister) was looking? How?
Today, with Mrs. Taylor, we learned about the importance of "let it go" when it comes to "stuck thinking." What does "flexible thinking mean?" ( think about what other people need; change our thinking, change our plan)
We took a math assessment on length today. What did you notice about this assessment? What did you do when you got to a challenging problem?
In the book Each Kindness, the narrator changes her thinking about the new girl? How did she change? Why did she change?
This morning we had a guest teacher, Mrs. Klaus. Mrs. Klaus loves our class and was impressed by our first grade readers. Were you able to do the right thing, even when no one (Mrs. McCallister) was looking? How?
Today, with Mrs. Taylor, we learned about the importance of "let it go" when it comes to "stuck thinking." What does "flexible thinking mean?" ( think about what other people need; change our thinking, change our plan)
We took a math assessment on length today. What did you notice about this assessment? What did you do when you got to a challenging problem?
Monday, February 5, 2018
The Great Migration Simulation
The Great Migration Simulation
Wow! We had an amazing day learning about the The Great Migration. The Captain community organized 8 different stations in which our students rotated through learning about this important movement in our history. We had parent volunteers, administrators, and teachers come together to grow our students understanding of the history of United States.
Unfortunately, I was so engrossed in the simulation that I did not take pictures. However, we do have.....
Questions for the dinner table:
Why did African Americans from the South head north during The Great Migration?
What were some of the cities in the North that many African American people went to during The Great Migration?
What is soul food? Why is soul food important in the history of many black people?
Who was Louie Armstrong? Langston Hughes? Jacob Lawrence?
What was your job in the Great Migration? Did you have money on the trip? Why type of housing did you have?
When thinking about our five stances (persistence, resilience, empathy, optimism, and flexibility), what the people of The Great Migration Show?
Questions for the dinner table:
Why did African Americans from the South head north during The Great Migration?
What were some of the cities in the North that many African American people went to during The Great Migration?
What is soul food? Why is soul food important in the history of many black people?
Who was Louie Armstrong? Langston Hughes? Jacob Lawrence?
What was your job in the Great Migration? Did you have money on the trip? Why type of housing did you have?
When thinking about our five stances (persistence, resilience, empathy, optimism, and flexibility), what the people of The Great Migration Show?
Background knowledge:
The Great Migration was the movement of 6 million African Americans out of the rural Southern United States to the urban Northeast, Midwest, and South that occurred between 1916 and 1970. Until 1910, more than 90 percent of the African-American population lived in the American South. In 1900, only one-fifth of African-Americans living in the South were living in urban areas. By the end of the Great Migration, 53 percent of the African-American population remained in the South, while 40 percent lived in the North, and 7 percent in the West, and the African-American population had become highly urbanized.
Today's Great Migration Simulation kicks off our student of African American in history. Unfortunately, many of you share my similar history of learning mostly about history through only the eyes of the white population. During our social studies unit, we will learn about famous African American inventors, artists, scientists, and musicians. Questions at home can focus not only on the contributions and character of these great North Americans, but why they were important for the creation of the country that we live in today.
Friday, February 2, 2018
Fun Friday!
Reminder: Students can bring in a blanket or sleeping bag (and a stuffed animal) to school today as we "burrow" into reading on Groundhog's Day.
Questions for the dinner table
Is oobleck a solid or a liquid? How do you know?
Which object from your collection did you pick as your favorite? Why? Explain with details. (developing opinions/review for our writing unit)
We measured our tables with cubes. Then we measured our tables with paper clips. Why did we get different amounts?
What does a quarter look like? How much is it worth?
Have you caught any sneaky sounds in your reading? Which sounds? How were you able to figure out the word?
Have your recorded your audiobook for the kindergartners yet? How did it go? After listening to your own reading, what goals do you have?
Why does the number 102 have a 0 in the middle?
Wondering Wednesday
I am working to increase our kiddos' curiosity. Research shows that the longer kids are in school, the less questions they ask. This research breaks my heart and thus I am actively fighting back! Every Wednesday (Wondering Wednesday....π alliteration) during our class meeting, we go to the website https://wonderopolis.org/. Each day a new question is posted. Yesterday, we had a riveting conversation about the inside of a baseball. Do you know what baseballs are made of? Ask your kiddo. Please encourage questioning at home. As we think about raising future entrepreneurs and change makers of the future, we want our students to be able to question and wonder.
Questions for the dinner table
Is oobleck a solid or a liquid? How do you know?
Which object from your collection did you pick as your favorite? Why? Explain with details. (developing opinions/review for our writing unit)
We measured our tables with cubes. Then we measured our tables with paper clips. Why did we get different amounts?
What does a quarter look like? How much is it worth?
Have you caught any sneaky sounds in your reading? Which sounds? How were you able to figure out the word?
Have your recorded your audiobook for the kindergartners yet? How did it go? After listening to your own reading, what goals do you have?
Why does the number 102 have a 0 in the middle?
Wondering Wednesday
I am working to increase our kiddos' curiosity. Research shows that the longer kids are in school, the less questions they ask. This research breaks my heart and thus I am actively fighting back! Every Wednesday (Wondering Wednesday....π alliteration) during our class meeting, we go to the website https://wonderopolis.org/. Each day a new question is posted. Yesterday, we had a riveting conversation about the inside of a baseball. Do you know what baseballs are made of? Ask your kiddo. Please encourage questioning at home. As we think about raising future entrepreneurs and change makers of the future, we want our students to be able to question and wonder.
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Gallery Walk of a our collections as we prepare for writing |
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So thankful for our instructional interns, Mr. U and Ms. Kavanuagh! |
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Two of our students teaching our partner reading mini-lesson. Today they taught how to take on the role of the reader and the journalist. |
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Getting ready for writing by talking about how favorite item in our collection and providing reasons/details. |
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The kiddos loved bringing in their collections. Not only were the students able to "oral rehearse" their writing, but they were able to share a part of who they are with their friends. |
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